Many have asked if adding an amplifier would improve the sound of their AVR.
You can compute the power but and that may look good but it may also be that a particular speaker is not well driven by an AVR.
In pursuit of the answer for my particular system, I have decided to compare the ATI AT522C (arriving soon) to the Yamaha RX-820 driving my Revel M20 bookshelf speakers.
Will there be any improvement driving the speakers when neither amp should be clipping?
The Yamaha RX=A820 specs can be found here:
https://europe.yamaha.com/en/products/audio_visual/av_receivers_amps/rx-a820/specs.html
The ATI AT522NC specs can be found here:
http://ati-amp.com/manuals/AT500NC Manual Oct 2017 SM.pdf
The A820 is rated 100 WPC 2-channels driven into 8 Ohms 20Hz to 20kHz.
The AT522C is rated 200 WPC 2-channels driven into 8 Ohms 20Hz to 20kHz.
The Oppo 105D is the source will also be used for volume control. I’ll play some pure tones and adjust the A820 volume as close as possible (should be within .5 DB) comparing the voltage. Once matched, I can listen to both components (the Yamaha in Pure Direct mode) by swapping the speaker cables.
The M20s are wall- mounted on OmniMounts and their placement is less than ideal. I have always been bothered by the noticeable degradation in sound quality when using the A820 HDMI input. I prefer listening to the 105 analog outs in the A820’s Pure Direct mode.
One might think that bookshelf speakers are easier to drive but this is not always the case. The M20’s measurements can be found on Stereophile:
https://www.stereophile.com/content/revel-performa-m20-loudspeaker-measurements
My estimate of the Revels' voltage sensitivity was a little lower than specified, at 84.5dB(B)/2.83V/m. Given the sophistication of Revel's measurement facilities and the agreement I had obtained between my figure and their figure for the Performa F30, I was surprised by this disparity. I rechecked my figures; no change.
The speaker's impedance was assessed using an Audio Precision System One; the results are shown in fig.1, with the tweeter-level control set to its maximum and minimum positions. The lowest impedance is with the control set to "+1," in which case the minimum magnitude is 4 ohms between 2 and 3kHz. The electrical phase angle varies quite considerably, with a worst-case combination of 5.9 ohms and 42 degrees capacitive angle occurring at 100Hz. Good 4-ohm-rated amplifiers will work best with this speaker.
The M20s drop below 4 Ohms between 80 and 90Hz. So, they are inefficient and a somewhat complex load. I may also arrange a SBT.
- Rich